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SK Telecom's Profitability at Risk Amid State-Driven Tariff Cuts and Free AI Demands

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chaeyun@

기사입력 : 2025-06-11 09:50

◇ President Lee Jae-myung’s Practical Telecom Policy: Pledges Major Expansion of Telecom and AI Benefits
◇ Additional Burden from One-Off Costs Like USIM Replacement and Government Commitments
◇ Free AI Rollout Announced… Uncertain Outlook for Monetizing ‘A dot (A.)’

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Ryu Young-sang, SK Telecom CEO / photo = SK Telecom

Ryu Young-sang, SK Telecom CEO / photo = SK Telecom

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[Korea Financial Times, Jeong Chaeyun] SK Telecom (CEO Ryu Young-sang, hereafter SKT) is facing a red flag for profitability. President Lee Jae-myung has emphasized policies for telecom fee reductions and the free distribution of Korean-style AI. While SKT’s core telecom business has already been hit by the fallout from the personal information leak involving USIM cards in April, prospects for monetizing its new business model ‘A dot (A.)’ have also become unclear. The industry is watching closely to see whether SKT can defend its Q2 earnings under the new administration.

According to the telecom industry on June 10, President Lee has pledged to greatly expand nationwide telecom and AI (artificial intelligence) benefits as part of his campaign promise to reduce living costs.

He proposed introducing tax deductions for telecom fees, offering a 50% discount on telecom charges for military personnel, and reducing data rates for residents in rural and fishing communities. The pledges also include new features such as allowing users to roll over their unused data to the next month or gift it to others, as well as implementing a nationwide data plan that guarantees a certain quality of service (QoS) for all citizens.

The new administration has designed telecom policy with a practical focus to ease household expenses. However, the three major telecom companies (SKT, KT, LG Uplus) are concerned these policies could undermine profitability in their core telecom business. They also expect the policies to impact their ongoing efforts to diversify into AI and other non-telecom businesses.

SKT is particularly troubled. The company still faces one-off costs from the USIM personal information leak, compounded by the government’s push for rate cuts and the announcement of free AI distribution.

According to Lim Bong-ho, Head of SKT’s MNO Business Division, the cost per physical USIM is KRW 7,700. With approximately 20 million USIM replacements required for all SKT subscribers, the total cost for USIMs alone amounts to KRW 154 billion. Adding KRW 30–40 billion in distribution costs, SKT’s total expected outlay for this incident is about KRW 194 billion.

Lim stated, “We are accounting for the costs as they occur,” indicating SKT will reflect these costs in its Q2 results this year. Given that SKT posted separate operating profit of KRW 450.4 billion in Q2 last year, the industry believes the company can absorb the KRW 194 billion hit.

However, a decline in performance appears inevitable. In addition to USIM replacement costs, SKT must consider compensation to agencies, waivers of penalty fees in collective disputes, subscriber losses, potential fines, and lawsuits related to the data breach.

SKT is also grappling with ongoing subscriber churn and a halt in new subscriptions—the company’s most valuable asset. CFO Kim Yang-seop said, “We are planning finances under the assumption that all 24 million customers will replace their USIMs,” but acknowledged, “There could be negative impacts on revenue due to the suspension of number portability and new sign-ups.”

While SKT faces worsening profitability in its core telecom business due to the USIM hacking incident, its future growth engine—the AI business—is also under threat. The government’s plan to distribute a ‘Korean ChatGPT’ for free is expected to adversely affect B2C (business-to-consumer) AI monetization, a key revenue stream.

Currently, the three telecom companies are pursuing business diversification with flagship AI B2C services: SKT’s ‘A dot (A.)’, KT-Microsoft’s ‘Korean AI’, and LG Uplus’s ‘IXIO’. With 5G subscriptions plateauing at around 70%, they are increasingly looking beyond telecom for new growth.

SKT announced in March that it would begin monetizing ‘A dot (A.)’ for B2C, streamlining underused features and expanding core AI services to boost competitiveness.

According to SKT’s earnings report, AI business revenue—including 'A dot (A.)’—was KRW 102 billion in Q1 this year, accounting for about 3.3% of total revenue, up 11.1% year-on-year.

An industry insider commented, “Until the introduction of 6G, telecom operators have no special new revenue source in telecom. Rather than imposing direct or indirect regulations on AI and telecom as public goods, we hope that, as the new administration is just beginning, relevant ministries and agencies will work together to develop concrete implementation plans.”

Jeong Chaeyun (chaeyun@fntimes.com)

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